This Article is From Apr 25, 2021

4 Covid Patients Die In Haryana Hospital Allegedly Due To Oxygen Shortage

Meanwhile, a private hospital in Gurgaon denied reports that four patients died due to alleged oxygen shortage in the facility. The hospital authorities said those who died were critically ill.

Advertisement
India News

3 patients died in ICU, while one patient died in the ward, a hospital official said. (Representational)

Rewari:

Four patients died in a private hospital today allegedly due to a shortage of medical oxygen following which the district administration launched an investigation to ascertain the reason behind the deaths.

Meanwhile, a private hospital in Gurgaon denied reports that four patients died due to an alleged oxygen shortage in the facility. The hospital authorities said those who died were critically ill.

After the deaths in Rewari, relatives of some of the patients, who were admitted to the designated COVID facility, held a protest outside the building complex alleging there was a grave shortage of medical oxygen.

"Three patients died in ICU, while one patient died in the ward. We have limited oxygen supplies. We are repeatedly telling the administration about this and have been sending them reminders," a hospital official told reporters outside the building.

"We have been sending empty oxygen cylinders to vendors to fill them again. Since 9 am, we have been telling the authorities that we have limited stock," he said.

Advertisement

The hospital official said the hospital has a per day consumption of 300 medical oxygen cylinders. "There are 114 COVID patients admitted in the hospital," he said.

Narnaul Deputy Commissioner Ajay Kumar, who is currently officiating as the Deputy Commissioner of Rewari district, said the allegations of oxygen shortage and four deaths were made by the hospital.

Advertisement

"The sub-divisional magistrate, chief medical officer, and other officials are at the hospital to find out what led to these deaths. They (the hospital) are claiming that there was an oxygen shortage. However, from the administration's end, regular supply has been given. So, we are finding out where the gap arose, all this is being investigated," Ajay Kumar told PTI over the phone.

A person whose aunt was admitted to the hospital could be seen pleading with some police officials outside the facility, asking them to do something immediately to ensure that the hospital gets adequate stock of medical oxygen.

Advertisement

The private hospital in Gurgaon, where four patients died allegedly due to oxygen shortage, said, "These patients had severe Covid. Although, we are facing a crunch in oxygen supplies, in the case of these patients, it was not that we ran out of oxygen supply. Being critically ill, their oxygen saturation levels dropped sharply. The doctors tried their best to revive them, but unfortunately, they passed away."

In the case of Covid patients who are critically ill, one cannot predict when the saturation levels will fall, one of the owners of the hospital told PTI over the phone.

Advertisement

She said that given the present surge in demand of oxygen some of the patient's attendants have arranged some cylinders as a backup on their own.

Haryana has seen a rise in coronavirus cases and fatalities in the current month. The demand for medical liquid oxygen has also increased in hospitals

Advertisement

Due to the increased demand to cater to critical Covid patients, the Haryana government today prohibited all oxygen manufacturing units or suppliers of oxygen in the state from providing the gas to industries till further orders.

"It is further directed that these units will provide their entire production of oxygen for medical purpose," a state government order said.

These units are also directed to produce oxygen to their maximum capacity and maintain a record of the manufacturing and distribution on a daily basis," it further said.

However, industries like pharmaceutical, petroleum refineries, steel plants, oxygen cylinder manufacturers, food and water purification etc have been exempted from the order.

Advertisement